tree
n. 樹; 木料; 樹狀圖; 宗譜
A tree is a tall plant that has a hard trunk, branches, and leaves.
I planted those apple trees.
我栽了那些蘋果樹。
...a variety of shrubs and trees.
各種灌木和喬木
If you say that someone is barking up the wrong tree, you mean that they are following the wrong course of action because their beliefs or ideas about something are incorrect.
Scientists in Switzerland realised that most other researchers had been barking up the wrong tree.
瑞士科學家意識到其他研究者大多研究方向不對頭。
If someone can't see the wood for the trees in British English, or can't see the forest for the trees in American English, they are very involved in the details of something and so they do not notice what is important about the thing as a whole.
1. a tall perennial woody plant having a main trunk and branches forming a distinct elevated crown; includes both gymnosperms and angiosperms
2. a figure that branches from a single root;
1. chase a bear up a tree with dogs and kill it
out of one's tree
(非正式,主北美)極傻的;發瘋的
up a tree
(非正式,主北美)陷於困境的;被逼至困境的
up a tree【非正式用語】
處於一個非常困難或迷惑的境地;無助的
The tree is in fruit now.
這棵樹已結果.
The driveway makes a hook around an old tree.
車道繞過一棵老樹來了個急轉彎.
They dragged the fallen tree clear of the road.
他們把倒下的樹從路上拖走.
The sparrow whizzed up into a tree.
麻雀噌的一聲飛上了樹.
The falling tree just grazed his chair.
倒下的樹剛剛擦過他的椅子.